Letter

A. Hurlbut to Samuel R. Curtis, December 28, 1862

December 28, 1862.

December 28, 1862. Brig. Gen. THomas A. DAVIES, Commanding at Columbus, Ky.:

Siz: I inclose herewith copy of a dispatch just received from Brigadier-General Gorman :*

Unless ‘you have orders from Washington or from Major-General Curtis requiring or authorizing the detention of troops destined for Helena I would advise you to forward them at once. I will not at this distance, and on the vague reports we have, put this advice into the shape of an order.

My best information is that the force which has broken your road did not exceed 3,500, and those mainly cavalry. It is my opinion that Columbus is perfectly defensible with 2,000 men. I am holding Memphis with 2,500, and no advantages of natural position or strong works. Such regiments as are under orders to join me here will report as soon as practicable, as this point has now become the basis of supply.

General Grant is at Holly Springs, with one division at Abbeville, and Quinby is coming in with his division and a wagon train. Forward as soou as practicable the medicine supplies.

I sincerely hope your order for the destruction of the armament at Island No. 10 has not been fulfilled. The order is premature. The armament can be destroyed when defense is impossible. If not carried into effect the order will be countermanded and the island held, with instructions not to destroy the armament until capture becomes imminent.

Very respectfully, your obedient servant,

8. A. HURLBUT,
Major-General.
CoLumBus, Ky., December 23, 1862.
Maj. Gen. SAMUEL R. CURTIS:
General Halleck telegraphed to me to hold Columbus at all buzards
and make no movements of troops till Columbus is perfectly secure. I
have barely troops enough, with these you sent me, to secure this object. Van Dorn is in the rear of Fort Earnest by last account; from
this I judge he has threatened Memphis and intends to try Fort Earnest; from this fact I think Memphis is inno danger. On consultation

Editor's Notes
From: Operations in West Tennessee and Mississippi, Pt. 1. Summary: A. Hurlbut advises Brig. Gen. Davies to forward troops to Helena unless ordered otherwise, assesses Columbus's defensibility, and updates on troop movements and supply status in December 1862.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 17, Part 1 View original source ↗